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CAVITY II – RF-DIPOLE CAVITY TEST RESULTS

LHC – CC-13, CERN. December 9-11, 2013. CAVITY II – RF-DIPOLE CAVITY TEST RESULTS. Proof–of–Principle RF–Dipole Design. 34 cm. 53 cm. B Field. E Field. Proof–of–Principle Cavity Fabrication. Proof-of-Principle cavity fabricated at Niowave Inc. Cavity thickness – 3 mm. Teflon Bead.

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CAVITY II – RF-DIPOLE CAVITY TEST RESULTS

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  1. LHC – CC-13, CERN December 9-11, 2013 CAVITY II – RF-DIPOLE CAVITYTEST RESULTS

  2. Proof–of–Principle RF–Dipole Design 34 cm 53 cm B Field E Field

  3. Proof–of–Principle Cavity Fabrication • Proof-of-Principle cavity fabricated at Niowave Inc. • Cavity thickness – 3 mm Teflon Bead Al Bead • Bead pull measurements of on axis electric and magnetic field components

  4. Proof–of–Principle Cavity Surface Treatment • Surface treatment and rf testing done at Jefferson Lab • Procedure: • Bulk BCP • Average removal – 85 μm • Planned total removal – 120 μm • Reduced etch rate from 2.7-2.8 μm /min to 1.8 μm/min due acid mixture contamination with glycol • Heat treatment – At 6000 C for 10 hours • Light BCP – ~10 μm • High Pressure Rinse – 3 passes • Cavity assembly and leak check in clean room

  5. Multipacting in Proof–of–Principle Design • Multipacting analysis using Tack3P in SLAC – ACE3P suite Expected multipacting levels at very low VT of low orders with low impact energies • A multipacting barrier was observed in the first 2 K test at very low fields • Increasing the power processed the cavity and no multipacting was observed in the following 4.2 K and 2 K tests

  6. P-o-P Cavity – 4.2 K and 2.0 K Test Results • Design goal can be achieved with three cavities • Multipacting levels observed below 2.5 MV and processed easily • Achieved fields at 2.0 K: • ET = 18.6 MV/m • VT = 7.0 MV • EP = 75 MV/m • BP = 131 mT • RF performance was limited at 7.0 MV due to high field emission • At 2.0 K with Rs = 11.3 nΩ (Rres = 10 nΩ) • Expected Q0 = 1.25×1010 • Measured Q0= 4.0×109 • Total design requirement – 13.4 MV • Design requirement per cavity – 3.4 MV Multipacting Quench Limited by rf power 5.0 3.4

  7. P-o-P Cavity Test Results Surface Resistance Simulated kL– 117.3 Hz/(MV/m)2 • For a Rres = 10 nΩ • At 2.0 K  RS = 11.3 nΩ, Q0= 1.25 ×1010 • At 4.2 K  RS = 81.3 nΩ, Q0 = 1.8 ×109 • Measured Q0 at 2.0 K = 4.0×109 • Q0 due to power losses at the beam port stainless steel blank flanges  3.8×109 Magnetic field and surface field on the beam port Pressure Sensitivity Lorentz Detuning

  8. 499 MHz RF-Dipole Cavity Surface Processing Procedure • Bulk BCP of ~150 μm • Average removal • 1st treatment: 108 μm • 2nd treatment: 200 μm • Heat Treatment  H2 degassing at 6000C – 10 hours 44 cm 24 cm • Light BCP – Removal of 10 μm (2nd time: 20 μm) after heat treatment • High pressure rinsing in 2 passes • Cavity Assembly – with fixed coupling

  9. 499 MHz – 4.2 K and 2.0 K Test Results • Multipacting was easily processed during the first rf test at 4.2 K rf test • No multipacting levels were observed in the reprocessed cavity • Hard quench observed at 4.2 MV • Achieved fields at 2.0 K • ET = 14 MV/m • VT = 4.2MV • EP = 40MV/m • BP = 61.3mT Quench

  10. 499 MHz – Surface Resistance • Measured Q0 • 1st Test: 1.6×1010 • 2nd Test: 8.1×109 • Reduced Q0at 2.0 K with surface reprocessing • 1st bulk BCP removal: 108 μm • 2nd bulk BCP removal: 200 μm • Q0 dropped with the increase in residual surface resistance • Residual resistance • 1st Test: 5.5 nΩ • 2nd Test: 9.0 nΩ

  11. Prototype RF–Dipole Design • Electromagnetic mode is the same • Prototype design has improved rf-properties 28.1 cm 54 cm B Field E Field

  12. Prototype Design – FPC and Pick Up Ports Fundamental Power Coupler Pick Up Port Options • Outer conductor = 36 mm • Inner conductor = 27 mm • To achieve 1.0 W at 3.4 MV • Qext = ~3.0×1010 • Outer conductor = 62 mm • Inner conductor = 27 mm • Qext = 1.0×106 (1) • All penetrations to the He tank will be from top • Magnetic coupling  Field enhancement at the port • 75 Ω inner conductor • Port losses at the SS flanges on the beam pipes • Beam port 1 (shorter): 1.1 mW • Beam port 2 (longer): 0.3 μW • Is not an issue on assembled cavity in the cryomodule • Electric coupling  No field enhancement • 50 Ω inner conductor (2)

  13. Prototype Design – HOM Damping • Analysis of HOM damping – Zenghai Li Horizontal HOM Waveguide Vertical HOM WG-Coax Coupler • Horizontal HOM Coupler • Ridged waveguide coupler • Couple to both horizontal dipole and accelerating HOM modes • Operating mode below cutoff – naturally reject operating mode • Groove reduces multipacting levels at the waveguide • Vertical HOM coupler • Selective WG-stub-coaxial coupler, does not couple to operating mode - no filter needed • Damps both vertical HOM and accelerating HOM modes • Modified V-HOM coupler meets impedance threshold requirements

  14. Prototype Design – HOM Damping • Current design specifications per cavity • Longitudinal impedance threshold – 0.2 MΩ • Transverse impedance threshold – 0.125 MΩ • Vertical and horizontal HOM couplers optimized to damp high Q modes at 1.265 and 1.479 GHz

  15. Prototype Design – Field Non-Uniformity (A) (B) Higher Order Multipole Components • Curvature around beam aperture to • Reduce field non-uniformity • Suppress higher order multipole components • Multipole component b3 is reduced below requirements • Any specifications for other higher order multipole components? Voltage deviation at 20 mm • Horizontal: 5.0%  0.2% • Vertical: 5.5%  2.4%

  16. Prototype Design – Multipole Analysis • Effect of cavity imperfections on multipole components – R. Olave • (A) Yaw (rotation about y-axis) of one pole. • (B) Pitch (rotation about x-axis) of one pole. • (C) Roll (rotation about z-axis) of one pole. • (D) Horizontal displacement of one pole. • (E) Vertical displacement of one pole. • (F) Blending radius at the outer corner of one pole. • (G) Blending radius of the feather-like structure near the beam line of one pole. • (H) Aperture radius in one pole. * Small individual imperfections have negligible effects on the multipole components, but may shift the electrical center and operating frequency. • Strength of the multipole components is mainly determined by the aperture region of the poles near the beamline. • Initial analysis focused on individual imperfections or departures from the ideal cavity poles due to fabrication or welding errors (no deformations due to tuning processes considered). Pitch 5° Shift of electrical center observed

  17. Prototype Design – Multipole Analysis So far there are no individual imperfections that would make the cavity non-compliant with the multipole component requirements for the LHC system. The largest effect on the multipole components observed is produced by the roll of a pole Roll 5° Yaw Pitch Roll The largest frequency shift observed is produced by the horizontal displacement of a pole Studies of the effects of individual imperfections due to fabrication and welding of the cavity + couplers are underway.

  18. Stiffening ribs Prototype Cavity Cryomodule Cryomodule design for rf-dipole cavity Room Temp Cavity • Mechanical analysis • Prototype cavity fabrication by Niowave Inc. Cryomodule Design • He tank • Cryostat Tom Nicol – Fermilab Ofelia Capatina – CERN Jim Henry – JLab

  19. Current Status and Future Plans Proof-of-Principle Cavity • First cryogenic tests of proof-of-principle cavity is completed • Cavity performance reached higher gradients and is capable of achieving design specifications • Achieved a total transverse deflection of 7 MV CW (twice the design voltage) • Multipacting conditions were processed easily and did not reoccur • Retesting the cavity on improving Q0  Further testing at CERN is on the plan Prototype Cavity • Electromagnetic design is complete including multipacting levels, HOM damping, reduced multipole components • Multipole analysis on design sensitivities shows that cavity design is extremely robust against mechanical imperfections • Higher order mode damping meets current impedance threshold requirements • Mechanical model study for SPS test and SM18 test cryostat stress requirements are ongoing • Several approaches of He tank design has been studied  Converging the ideas into a single design

  20. Acknowledgments • ODU – Jean Delayen, HyeKyoungPark, RocioOlave, Chris Hopper, Alex Castilla, Kevin Mitchell • JLab – Peter Kneisel, Tom Powers, Kirk Davis, Joe Preble, Tony Reilly • SLAC – ZenghaiLi • Niowave – Terry Grimm, Dmitry Gorelov, Chase Boulware • Fermilab – Tom Nicol • CERN – Rama Calaga, Ofelia Capatina

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